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Textile manufacturing
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Textile manufacturing or textile engineering is a major industry. It is largely based on the conversion of fibre into yarn, then yarn into fabric. These are then dyed or printed, fabricated into cloth which is then converted into useful goods such as clothing, household items, upholstery and various industrial products.[1]
Different types of fibres are used to produce yarn. Cotton remains the most widely used and common natural fiber making up 90% of all-natural fibers used in the textile industry. People often use cotton clothing and accessories because of comfort, not limited to different weathers. There are many variable processes available at the spinning and fabric-forming stages coupled with the complexities of the finishing and colouration processes to the production of a wide range of products.
History
[edit]Textile manufacturing in the modern era is an evolved form of the art and craft industries. Until the 18th and 19th centuries, the textile industry was a household work. It became mechanised in the 18th and 19th centuries, and has continued to develop through science and technology since the twentieth century.[2] Specifically, ancient civilizations in India, Egypt, China, sub-Saharan Africa, Eurasia, South America, and North and East Africa all had some forms of textile production. The first book about textile manufacturing is considered to be 'A Treatise on the Art of Weaving' by John Murphy.[3]
Processing of cotton
[edit]| Bale breaker | Blowing room | |||||
| Willowing | ||||||
| Breaker scutcher | Batting | |||||
| Finishing scutcher | Lapping | Teasing | ||||
| Carding | Carding room | |||||
| Sliver lap | ||||||
| Combing | ||||||
| Drawing | ||||||
| Slubbing | ||||||
| Intermediate | ||||||
| Roving | Fine roving | |||||
| Mule spinning | Ring spinning | Spinning | ||||
| Reeling | Doubling | |||||
| Winding | Bundling | Bleaching | ||||
| Weaving shed | Winding | |||||
| Beaming | Cabling | |||||
| Warping | Gassing | |||||
| Sizing/slashing/dressing | Spooling | |||||
| Weaving | ||||||
| Cloth | Yarn (cheese) Bundle | Sewing thread | ||||
Cotton is the world's most important natural fibre. In the year 2007, the global yield was 25 million tons from 35 million hectares cultivated in more than 50 countries.[4]
There are six stages to the manufacturing of cotton textiles:[5]
Cultivating and harvesting
[edit]Cotton is grown in locations with long, hot, dry summers with plenty of sunshine and low humidity. Indian cotton, Gossypium arboreum, is finer but the staple is only suitable for hand processing. American cotton, Gossypium hirsutum, produces the longer staple needed for mechanised textile production.[6] The planting season is from September to mid-November, and the crop is harvested between March and June. The cotton bolls are harvested by stripper harvesters and spindle pickers that remove the entire boll from the plant. The cotton boll is the seed pod of the cotton plant; attached to each of the thousands of seeds are fibres about 2.5 cm long.[7] There is a higher rate of cotton being produced compared to the actual workers needed to produce the material. In 2013 a cotton farmer in Mississippi, Bower Flowers, produced around 13,000 bales of cotton in that year alone. This amount of cotton could be used to produce up to 9.4 million T-shirts.[8]
Ginning
[edit]The seed cotton goes into a cotton gin. The cotton gin separates seeds and removes the "trash" (dirt, stems and leaves) from the fibre. In a saw gin, circular saws grab the fibre and pull it through a grating that is too narrow for the seeds to pass. A roller gin is used with longer-staple cotton. Here, a leather roller captures the cotton. A knife blade, set close to the roller, detaches the seeds by drawing them through teeth in circular saws and revolving brushes which clean them away.[9] The ginned cotton fibre, known as lint, is then compressed into bales which are about 1.5 m tall and weigh almost 220 kg. Only 33% of the crop is usable lint. Commercial cotton is graded and priced according to its quality; this broadly relates to the average length of the staple and the variety of the plant. Longer-staple cotton (2½ in to 1¼ in) is called Egyptian, medium staple (1¼ in to ¾ in) is called American upland, and short staple (less than ¾ in) is called Indian.[10] The cotton seed is pressed into cooking oil. The husks and meal are processed into animal feed, and the stems into paper.
Preparatory processes – preparation of yarn
[edit]
Ginning, bale-making and transportation
[edit]Ginning, bale-making and transportation are done in the country of origin.
Opening and cleaning
[edit]Cotton is shipped to mills in large 500-pound bales. When the cotton comes out of a bale, it is all packed together and still contains vegetable matter. The bale is broken open using a machine with large spikes, called an opener. To fluff up the cotton and remove the vegetable matter, the cotton is sent through a picker or a similar machine. In a picker, the cotton is beaten with a beater bar to loosen it up. It is then fed through various rollers, which serve to remove the vegetable matter. The cotton, aided by fans, then collects on a screen and gets fed through more rollers where it emerges as a continuous soft fleecy sheet, known as a lap.[10][11]
Blending, mixing and scutching
[edit]Scutching refers to the process of cleaning cotton of its seeds and other impurities. The first scutching machine was invented in 1797, but did not come into further mainstream use until after 1808 or 1809, when it was introduced and used in Manchester, England. By 1816, it had become generally adopted. The scutching machine worked by passing the cotton through a pair of rollers, and then striking it with iron or steel bars called beater bars or beaters. The beaters, which turn very quickly, strike the cotton hard and knock the seeds out. This process is done over a series of parallel bars so as to allow the seeds to fall through. At the same time, air is blown across the bars, which carries the cotton into a cotton chamber.
Carding
[edit]

In the carding process, the fibres are separated and then assembled into a loose strand (sliver or tow). The cotton comes off of the picking machine in laps, and is then taken to carding machines. The carders line up the fibres neatly to make them easier to spin. The carding machine consists mainly of one big roller with smaller ones surrounding it. All of the rollers are covered in small teeth, and as the cotton is moved forwards, the teeth get finer (i.e. closer together). The cotton leaves the carding machine in the form of a sliver: a large rope of fibres.[12] In a wider sense, carding can refer to these four processes:
- Willowing: loosening the fibres
- Lapping: removing the dust to create a flat sheet or lap of cotton
- Carding: combing the tangled lap into a thick rope of 1/2 inch in diameter, a sliver
- Drawing: where a drawing frame combines 4 slivers into one, repeated for increased quality
Combing is optional, but is used to remove the shorter fibres, creating a stronger yarn.[13]
Several slivers are combined. Each sliver will have thin and thick spots, and by combining several slivers together, a more consistent size can be reached. Since combining several slivers produces a very thick rope of cotton fibres, the slivers are separated into rovings. Generally speaking, for machine processing, a roving is about the width of a pencil. These rovings (or slubbings) are then what are used in the spinning process.[14]
Spinning – yarn manufacture
[edit]Spinning
[edit]Most spinning today is done using break, or open-end spinning. This is a technique where the fibres are blown by air into a rotating drum, where they attach themselves to the tail of formed yarn that is continually being drawn out of the chamber. Other methods of break spinning use needles and electrostatic forces.[15] This method has replaced the older methods of ring and mule spinning. It is also easily adapted for artificial fibres.
The spinning machines takes the roving, thins it and twists it, creating yarn which it winds onto a bobbin.[16]
In mule spinning the roving is pulled off a bobbin and fed through rollers, which are feeding at several different speeds. This thins the roving at a consistent rate. If the roving was not a consistent size, then this step could cause a break in the yarn, or jam the machine. The yarn is twisted through the spinning of the bobbin as the carriage moves out, and is rolled onto a cylinder called a spindle, which then produces a cone-shaped bundle of fibres known as a "cop", as the carriage returns. Mule spinning produces a finer thread than ring spinning.[17]
The mule was an intermittent process, as the frame advanced and returned a distance of five feet. It was the descendant of the 1779 Crompton device. It produces a softer, less twisted thread that was favoured for fine fabrics and wefts.
The ring was a descendant of the Arkwright Water frame of 1769. It was a continuous process, the yarn was coarser, had a greater twist and was stronger, thus suitable for use as warp thread. Ring spinning is slow due to the distance the thread must pass around the ring.
Sewing thread was made of several threads twisted together, or doubled.
Checking
[edit]This is the process where each of the bobbins is rewound to give a tighter bobbin.
Folding and twisting
[edit]Plying is done by pulling yarn from two or more bobbins and twisting it together, in a direction opposite to the one it was spun in. Depending on the weight desired, the cotton may or may not be plied, and the number of strands twisted together varies.[18]
Gassing
[edit]Gassing is the process of passing yarn very rapidly through a series of Bunsen gas flames in a gassing frame, to burn off the projecting fibres and to make the thread round and smooth and bright. Only the better qualities of yarn are gassed, like the kinds used for voiles, poplins, venetians, gabardines, Egyptian cottons, etc. The thread loses around 5-8% of its weight if it's gassed. The gassed yarn is darker in shade afterwards, but should not be scorched.[19]
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Mule spinning
-
Mule spinning
-
Ring spinning
-
Ring spinning
Measurements
[edit]- Cotton Counts: Refers to the thickness of the cotton yarn where 840 yards of yarns weighs 1 pound (0.45 kg). 10-count cotton means that 8,400 yards (7,700 m) of yarn weighs 1 pound (0.45 kg). This is coarser than 40-count cotton where 40x840 yards are needed. In the United Kingdom, counts from 10 to 40 are coarse (Oldham Counts), 40 to 80 are medium counts and above 80 is a fine count. In the United States ones, counts up to the 20s are coarse counts.
- Hank: A length of 7 leas or 840 yards (the worsted hank is only 560 yd[20])
- Thread: A length of 54 in (the circumference of a warp beam)
- Bundle: Usually 10 lb
- Lea: A length of 80 threads or 120 yards[21]
- Denier: this is an alternative method. It is defined as a number that is equivalent to the weight in grams of 9000m of a single yarn. 15 denier is finer than 30 denier.
- Tex: is the weight in grams of 1 km of yarn.[22]
Weaving
[edit]
The weaving process uses a loom. The lengthwise threads are known as the warp, and the crosswise threads are known as the weft. The warp, which must be strong, needs to be presented to loom on a warp beam. The weft passes across the loom in a shuttle that carries the yarn on a pirn. These pirns are automatically changed by the loom. Thus, the yarn needs to be wrapped onto a beam, and onto pirns before weaving can commence.[23]
Winding
[edit]After being spun and plied, the cotton thread is taken to a warping room where the winding machine takes the required length of yarn and winds it onto warpers' bobbins.
Warping or beaming
[edit]Racks of bobbins are set up to hold the thread while it is wound onto the warp beam of a loom. Because the thread is fine, often three of these would be combined to get the desired number of ends.[24]
Sizing
[edit]A sizing machine is needed for strengthening the warp by adding starch, to reduce breakage.
Drawing in, Looming
[edit]The process of drawing each end of the warp separately through the dents of the reed and the eyes of the healds, in the order indicated by the draft.
Pirning (processing the weft)
[edit]A pirn-winding frame was used to transfer the weft from cheeses of yarn onto the pirns that would fit into the shuttle.
Weaving
[edit]At this point, the thread is woven. Depending on the era, one person could manage anywhere from 3 to 100 machines. In the mid-nineteenth century, four was the standard number. A skilled weaver in 1925 could run 6 Lancashire Looms. As time progressed, new mechanisms were added that stopped the loom any time something went wrong. The mechanisms checked for such things as broken warp or weft threads, the shuttle going straight across, and if the shuttle was empty. Forty of these Northrop Looms or automatic looms could be operated by one skilled worker.[25]
The three primary movements of a loom are shedding, picking, and beating-up.
- Shedding: The operation of dividing the warp into two lines so that the shuttle can pass between these lines. There are two general kinds of sheds: "open" and "closed." In an open shed, the warp threads are moved from one line to the other when the pattern requires it. In a closed shed, the warp threads are all placed level.
- Picking: The operation of projecting the shuttle from side to side of the loom through the division in the warp threads. This is done by the overpick or underpick motions. The overpick is suitable for quick-running looms, whereas the underpick is best for heavy or slow looms.
- Beating-up: The third primary movement of the loom when making cloth: the action of the reed as it drives each pick of weft to the fell of the cloth.[26]
The Lancashire Loom was the first semi-automatic loom. Jacquard looms and Dobby looms are looms that have sophisticated methods of shedding. They may be separate looms or mechanisms added to a plain loom. A Northrop Loom was fully automatic and was mass-produced between 1909 and the mid-1960s. Modern looms run faster and do not use a shuttle: there are air jet looms, water jet looms, and rapier looms.
Measurements
[edit]Ends and Picks: Picks refer to the weft, ends refer to the warp. The coarseness of the cloth can be expressed as the number of picks and ends per quarter-inch square, or per inch square. Ends is always written first. For example: Heavy domestics are made from coarse yarns, such as 10's to 14's warp and weft, and about 48 ends and 52 picks.[27]
Associated job titles
[edit]Associated job titles include piecer, scavenger, weaver, tackler, draw boy.
Issues
[edit]When a hand loom was located in the home, children helped with the weaving process from an early age. Piecing needs dexterity, and a child can be as productive as an adult. When weaving moved from the home to the mill, children were often allowed to help their older sisters, and laws had to be made to prevent child labour from becoming established. The working conditions of cotton production were often harsh, with long hours, low pay, and dangerous machinery. Children, above all, were also prone to physical abuse and often forced to work in unsanitary conditions. It should also be noted that children who worked in handlooms often faced extreme poverty and were unable to obtain an education. The working conditions of cotton production were often harsh, with long hours, low pay, and dangerous machinery. unable to obtain an education.
Knitting – fabric manufacture
[edit]

Knitting by machine is done in two different ways; warp and weft. Weft knitting (as seen in the pictures) is similar in method to hand knitting with stitches all connected to each other horizontally. Various weft machines can be configured to produce textiles from a single spool of yarn or multiple spools, depending on the size of the machine cylinder (in which the needles are bedded). In a warp knit, there are many pieces of yarn and there are vertical chains, zigzagged together by crossing the cotton yarn.
Warp knits do not stretch as much as a weft knits, and they are run-resistant. A weft knit is not run-resistant, but it has more stretch. This is especially true if spools of elastane are processed from separate spool containers and interwoven through the cylinder with cotton yarn, giving the finished product more flexibility and preventing it from having a 'baggy' appearance. The average t-shirt is a weft knit.[28]
Finishing – processing of textiles
[edit]Finishing is a broad range of physical and chemical processes/treatments that complete one stage of textile manufacturing, sometimes in preparation for the next step. Finishing adds value to the product and makes it more attractive, useful and functional for the end-user.[29] Fresh off the loom, cotton fabric not only contains impurities, including warp size, but it also requires further treatment to develop its full potential and to add to its value.[30][31]
Desizing
[edit]Depending on the size that has been used, the cloth may be steeped in a dilute acid and then rinsed, or enzymes may be used to break down the size.[32]
Scouring
[edit]Scouring is a chemical washing process carried out on cotton fabric to remove natural waxes and non-fibrous impurities (like the remains of seed fragments) from the fibres and any soiling or dirt that might remain. Scouring is usually carried out in iron vessels called kiers. The fabric is boiled in an alkali solution, which forms a soap with free fatty acids. A kier is usually enclosed, so the solution of sodium hydroxide can be boiled under pressure, excluding oxygen, which would degrade the cellulose in the fibre. If the appropriate reagents are used, scouring will also remove size from the fabric, although desizing often precedes scouring and is considered to be a separate process. Preparation and scouring are prerequisites to most of the other finishing processes. At this stage, even the most naturally white cotton fibres are yellowish, and bleaching is required.[32]
Bleaching
[edit]Bleaching improves whiteness by removing natural colouration and whatever impurities remain in the cotton; the degree of bleaching is determined by the levels of whiteness and absorbency required of the fabric. Cotton, being a vegetable fibre, is bleached using an oxidizing agent, such as diluted sodium hypochlorite or diluted hydrogen peroxide. If the fabric is to be dyed a deep shade, then lower levels of bleaching are acceptable. However, for white bedding and for medical applications, the highest levels of whiteness and absorbency are essential.[33]
Mercerising
[edit]A further possibility is mercerising, during which the fabric is treated with a caustic soda solution, to cause swelling of the fibres. This results in improved lustre, strength and dye affinity. Cotton is mercerised under tension, and all alkali must be washed out before the tension is released, or shrinkage will take place.[34]
Many other chemical treatments may be applied to cotton fabrics to produce low flammability, crease-resistance and other qualities, but the four most important non-chemical finishing treatments are:
Singeing
[edit]Singeing is designed to burn off the surface fibres from the fabric to produce smoothness. The fabric passes over brushes to raise the fibres, then passes over a plate heated by gas flames.
Raising
[edit]During raising, the fabric surface is treated with sharp teeth to lift the surface fibres, thereby imparting downiness, softness and warmth, as in flannelette.
Calendering
[edit]Calendering is a process in which the fabric is passed between heated rollers to generate smooth, polished or embossed effects.
Shrinking (sanforising)
[edit]Sanforisation is a form of mechanical pre-shrinking, so that the fabric will shrink less upon laundering.
Dyeing
[edit]Dyeing is commonly carried out with an anionic direct dye by completely immersing the fabric (or yarn) in an aqueous dye bath according to a prescribed procedure. For improved fastness to washing, rubbing and light, further dyeing methods can be used. These require more complex chemistry during processing, and are thus more expensive to apply.
Printing
[edit]Printing is the application of colour in the form of a paste or ink to the surface of a fabric in a predetermined pattern. It can be described as a form of localised dyeing. Printing designs onto previously dyed fabric is also possible.
Economic, environmental and political consequences of cotton manufacture
[edit]Production of cotton requires arable land. In addition, cotton is farmed intensively and uses large amounts of fertilizer and 25% of the world's insecticides. Native Indian varieties of cotton were rainwater fed, but modern hybrids used for the mills need irrigation, which spreads pests. The 5% of cotton-bearing land in India uses 55% of all pesticides used in India.[6]
The consumption of energy in form of water and electricity is relatively high, especially in processes like washing, de-sizing, bleaching, rinsing, dyeing, printing, coating and finishing. Processing is time-consuming. The major portion of water in textile industry is used for wet processing of textile (70 per cent). Approximately 25 per cent of energy in the total textile production like fibre production, spinning, twisting, weaving, knitting, clothing manufacturing etc. is used in dyeing. About 34 per cent of energy is consumed in spinning, 23 per cent in weaving, 38 per cent in chemical wet processing and five per cent in miscellaneous processes. Power dominates consumption pattern in spinning and weaving, while thermal energy is the major factor for chemical wet processing.[4]
Cotton acts as a carbon sink as it contains cellulose and this contains 44.44% carbon. However, due to carbon emissions from fertiliser application, use of mechanized tools to harvest the cotton and so forth cotton manufacture tends to emit more CO2 than is stored in the form of cellulose.[35]
The growth of cotton is divided into two segments i.e. organic and genetically modified.[4] Cotton crop provides livelihood to millions of people but its production is becoming expensive because of high water consumption, use of expensive pesticides, insecticides and fertiliser. Genetically modified products aim to increase disease resistance and reduce the water required. The organic sector in India was worth $583 million. Genetically modified cotton, in 2007, occupied 43% of cotton growing areas in India.[6]
Before mechanisation, cotton was harvested manually by farmers in India and by African slaves in America. In 2012 Uzbekistan was a major exporter of cotton and uses manual labour during the harvest. Human rights groups have expressed concerns over healthcare professionals and children being forced to pick cotton.[36]
There was a 1.5 million tonne cotton deficit in 2018 due to adverse weather conditions, limited water, and pest issues.[37]
Processing of other vegetable fibres
[edit]Flax
[edit]Flax is a bast fibre, which means it comes in bundles under the bark of the Linum usitatissimum plant. The plant flowers and is harvested. It is subjected to retting, breaking, scutching, hackling or combing. It is then treated like cotton.[38]
Jute
[edit]Jute is a bast fibre, which comes from the inner bark of the plants of the Corchorus genus. It is retted like flax, sundried and baled. When spinning a small amount of oil must be added to the fibre. It can be bleached and dyed. It was used for sacks and bags but is now used for the backing for carpets.[39] Jute can be blended with other fibres to make composite fabrics and work continues in Bangladesh to refine the processes and extend the range of usage possible. In the 1970s, jute-cotton composite fabrics were known as jutton fabrics.[40]
Hemp
[edit]Hemp is a bast fibre from the inner bark of Cannabis sativa. It is difficult to bleach, and is used for making cord and rope. It is subject to retting, separating and pounding[41]
Other bast fibres
[edit]Other bast fibres used increasingly with the goal of ecological textile production include kenaf, ramie, nettle,[42] and urena.[43]
Other leaf fibres
[edit]Sisal is the main leaf fibre used; others are abacá and henequen.
Processing of wool and silk
[edit]Wool
[edit]
Wool comes from domesticated sheep. It is used to create two kinds of yarn, woolens and worsteds. These are distinguished by the direction of the wool fibres in relation to the thread; woolens are perpendicularly arranged, allowing for fluffy yarns that trap air, while worsteds have parallel fibres, creating a strong and smooth yarn.
Modern sheep have uniform fleeces, while primitive and landrace sheep often have dual coats; a soft, short under layer and a hardier, coarser, and longer guard layer. These can be sorted to be processed separately, or spun together. The differing characteristics of each coat allows for very different yarn; the guard hairs can be used for durable outerwear, while the inner coat is what is traditionally used to produce the ultrafine wedding ring shawls across Europe.[44] Spinning them together, like in lopi, produces a unique yarn that combines the strength of the guard hairs with the loft and softness of the undercoat.
Wool that has never been used is known as virgin wool and can be mixed with wool that has been recovered from rags. "Shoddy" is the term for recovered wool that is not matted, while "mungo" comes from felted wool. Extract is recovered chemically from mixed cotton/wool fabrics.
The fleece is shorn in one piece from the sheep. Ideally, the wool is cut as close to the skin as possible to maximise fibre length. Going over the same spot twice produces small fibres that will produce pills in finished fabric, something that skilled shearers are usually able to avoid. This is then skirted to remove the soiled wool from around the legs and anus, graded, and baled. Grading is done on quality as well as length of the fibres. Long wool fibres can be up to 15 in, but anything over 2.5 inches is suitable for combing into worsteds. Fibres less than that form short wool and are described as clothing or carding wool, and are best suited for the jumbled arrangement of woolens.
At the mill the wool is scoured in a detergent to remove grease (the yolk) and impurities. This is done mechanically in the opening machine. Vegetable matter can be removed chemically using sulphuric acid (carbonising). Washing uses a solution of soap and sodium carbonate. The wool is oiled before carding or combing.
- Woollens: Fibre is prepared through carding, which arranged fibres perpendicular to the spun yarn. It can also use noils from the worsted combs, mungo, and shoddy.
Worsteds
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- Combing: Oiled slivers are wound into laps, and placed in the circular comber. The worsted yarn gathers together to form a top. The shorter fibres or noils remain behind and are removed with a knife.
- Angora
Silk
[edit]The processes in silk production are similar to those of cotton but take account that reeled silk is a continuous fibre. The terms used are different.
- Opening bales. Assorting skeins: where silk is sorted by colour, size and quality, scouring: where the silk is washed in water of 40 degrees for 12 hours to remove the natural gum, drying: either by steam heating or centrifuge, softening: by rubbing to remove any remaining hard spots.
- Silk throwing (winding). The skeins are placed on a reel in a frame with many others. The silk is wound onto spools or bobbins.
- Doubling and twisting. The silk is far too fine to be woven, so now it is doubled and twisted to make the warp, known as organzine, and the weft, known as tram. In organzine each single is given a few twists per inch (tpi), and combine with several other singles counter twisted hard at 10 to 14 tpi. In tram the two singles are doubled with each other with a light twist, 3 to 6 tpi. Sewing thread is two tram threads, hard twisted, and machine-twist is made of three hard-twisted tram threads. Tram for the crepe process is twisted at up to 80 tpi to make it 'kick up'.
- Stretching. The thread is tested for consistent size. Any uneven thickness is stretched out. The resulting thread is reeled into containing 500 yd to 2500 yd. The skeins are about 50 inches in loop length.
- Dyeing: the skeins are scoured again, and discoloration removed with a sulphur process. This weakens the silk. The skeins are now tinted or dyed. They are dried and rewound onto bobbins, spools and skeins. Looming, and the weaving process on power looms is the same as with cotton.
- Weaving. The organzine is now warped. This is a similar process to in cotton. Firstly, thirty threads or so are wound onto a warping reel, and then using the warping reels, the threads are beamed. A thick layer of paper is laid between each layer on the beam to stop entangling.[45]
Environmental consequences of wool and silk manufacture
[edit]Both wool and silk require farmland. Whereas silkworms require mulberry leaves, sheep eat grass, clover, forbs and other pasture plants. Sheep, like all ruminants emit CO2 via their digestive system.[46] Also, their pastures may sometimes be fertilised which further increases emissions.[47]
Processing of synthetic fibres
[edit]
Synthetic fibres are the result of extensive development by scientists to improve upon the naturally occurring animal and plant fibres. In general, synthetic fibres are created by forcing, or extruding, fibre forming materials through holes (called spinnerets) into the air, thus forming a thread. Before synthetic fibres were developed, cellulose fibres were made from natural cellulose, which comes from plants.
The first artificial fibre, known as art silk from 1799 onwards, became known as viscose around 1894, and finally rayon in 1924. A similar product known as cellulose acetate was discovered in 1865. Rayon and acetate are both artificial fibres, but not truly synthetic, being made from wood. Although these artificial fibres were discovered in the mid-nineteenth century, successful modern manufacture began much later in the 1930s. Nylon, the first synthetic fibre, made its debut in the United States as a replacement for silk, and was used for parachutes and other military uses. [citation needed]
The techniques used to process these fibres in yarn are essentially the same as with natural fibres, modifications have to be made as these fibres are of great length, and have no texture such as the scales in cotton and wool that aid meshing.[citation needed]
Unlike natural fibres, produced by plants, animals or insects, synthetic fibres are made from fossil fuels, and thus require no farmland.[48]
See also
[edit]References
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- ^ A Treatise On The Art Of Weaving, With Calculations And Tables For The Use Of Manufacturers (1st ed.). Glasgow: Blackie and Son. 1824. pp. 16 to 500. ISBN 1444653490.
{{cite book}}: ISBN / Date incompatibility (help) - ^ a b c Majeed, A (19 January 2009), Cotton and textiles — the challenges ahead, Dawn-the Internet edition, retrieved 12 February 2009
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- ^ "Cultivating and Harvesting", Spinning the Web, Manchester City Council: Libraries, 2009
- ^ "Planet Money Makes A T-Shirt". NPR.org. Retrieved 29 October 2021.
- ^ Collier 1970, p. 11
- ^ a b Collier 1970, p. 13
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- ^ Collier 1970, pp. 66, 67
- ^ Collier 1970, p. 69
- ^ Collier 1970, pp. 70
- ^ Collier 1970, pp. 80
- ^ Collier 1970, pp. 71
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- ^ Curtis 1921, p. 1
- ^ Collier 1970, p. 74
- ^ Curtis 1921, p. Cotton count
- ^ Collier 1970, p. 3
- ^ "Weaving", Spinning the Web, Manchester City Council: Libraries, retrieved 29 January 2009
- ^ Kelsie, Cruse (2016). Clothing & Fashion. Learning Press. p. 80. ISBN 978-1-280-29435-8.
- ^ Fowler, Alan (2003), Lancashire Cotton Operatives and Work, 1900–1950: A Social History of Lancashire Cotton Operatives in the Twentieth Century, Ashgate Publishing, Ltd., p. 90, ISBN 978-0-7546-0116-6, retrieved 21 January 2009
- ^ Curtis 1921, p. Shed
- ^ Curtis 1921, p. Ends
- ^ Collier 1970, p. 118
- ^ Principles of Textile Finishing. Woodhead. 29 April 2017. pp. 1–10. ISBN 9780081006610.
- ^ "Finishing", Spinning the Web, Manchester City Council: Libraries, archived from the original on 24 October 2008, retrieved 29 January 2009
- ^ GREENHALGH, DAVID (2005), Cotton finishing, archived from the original on 12 February 2009, retrieved 12 February 2009
- ^ a b Collier 1970, p. 155
- ^ Collier 1970, p. 157
- ^ Collier 1970, p. 159
- ^ "Cutting cotton carbon emissions - Findings from Warangal, India" (PDF). awsassets.wwfindia.org. Retrieved 20 October 2022.
- ^ "Doctors and nurses forced to pick cotton". BBC News. 16 October 2012. Retrieved 20 October 2022.
- ^ Voora, Vivek; Larrea, Cristina; Bermudez, Steffany (2020). "Cotton". Global Market Report. International Institute for Sustainable Development (IISD).
- ^ Collier 1970, p. 16
- ^ Collier 1970, p. 17
- ^ Daily Star Magazine 1 October 2003, accessed 20 May 2010
- ^ Collier 1970, p. 19
- ^ Jain, A.; Rastogi, D.; Chanana, B. (2016). "Bast and leaf fibres: A comprehensive review". International Journal of Home Science. 2 (1): 313, 315.
- ^ Njoku, Chioma E.; Iwarere, Samuel A.; Daramola, Michael O. (September 2025). "A comprehensive review of invasive Urena lobata fibers and their composites". Bioresource Technology Reports. 31. doi:10.1016/j.biteb.2025.102172.
- ^ Lovick, Elizabeth (2013). The magic of Shetland lace knitting. Search Press. ISBN 978-1-84448-935-0. OCLC 862210511.
- ^ "Silk manufacture", Antiques Digest: Lost Knowledge from the Past, Old and Sold, 1900, retrieved 4 July 2009
- ^ Whitelaw, F. G.; Brockway, J. M.; Reid, R. S. (22 January 1972). "Measurement of Carbon Dioxide Production in Sheep by Isotope Dilution". Quarterly Journal of Experimental Physiology and Cognate Medical Sciences. 57 (1): 37–55. doi:10.1113/expphysiol.1972.sp002136. PMID 4553559.
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- ^ "Do Synthetic Fabrics Harm the Environment – No". www.actforlibraries.org. Retrieved 20 October 2022.
Bibliography
[edit]- Barfoot, J. R. (1840), The Progress of Cotton, Barfoot's series of coloured lithographs of 1840 depicting the cotton manufacturing process., Spinning the Web, Manchester Libraries: Darton, p. 12, retrieved 11 February 2009
- Collier, Ann M (1970), A Handbook of Textiles, Pergamon Press, p. 258, ISBN 978-0-08-018057-1
- Curtis, H P (1921), "Glossary of Textile Terms", Arthur Roberts Black Book., Manchester: Marsden & Company, Ltd. 1921, archived from the original on 6 October 2011, retrieved 11 January 2009
- Gurr, Duncan; Hunt, Julian (1998), The Cotton Mills of Oldham, Oldham Education & Leisure, ISBN 978-0-902809-46-8, archived from the original on 18 July 2011, retrieved 14 February 2009
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{{citation}}: ISBN / Date incompatibility (help) - Roberts, A S (1921), "Arthur Robert's Engine List", Arthur Roberts Black Book., One guy from Barlick-Book Transcription, archived from the original on 23 July 2011, retrieved 11 January 2009
External links
[edit]
Media related to Textile manufacturing at Wikimedia Commons
- Cotton Year Book 1910 (Textile Mercury) Descriptions and calculations for purchasing all cotton processing machines.
- 1921 John Hetherington & Sons Catalogue Descriptions and illustrations of principal machines.
Textile manufacturing
View on GrokipediaHistory
Pre-Industrial Techniques
Pre-industrial textile manufacturing encompassed manual processes for preparing natural fibers, spinning them into yarn, weaving fabric, and applying finishes, conducted primarily at household or small guild scales before mechanization in the late 18th century. These techniques originated in prehistoric times and evolved regionally, with evidence of yarn production from fibers like wool and flax appearing as early as the Neolithic period around 7000 BCE in the Middle East, where spindle whorls—small weights aiding rotation—facilitate twisting fibers into coherent strands.[13] Sheep wool dominated in prehistoric Central Europe due to its prevalence, requiring initial sorting to separate coarser guard hairs from finer underwool, followed by washing to remove lanolin and dirt, often achieved by soaking in streams or urine-based solutions for degreasing. Plant fibers such as flax underwent retting—fermenting in water to loosen fibers from stalks—then breaking, scutching to remove woody parts, and hackling to align strands, processes documented in ancient Egyptian and Greek practices where flax harvesting timing influenced yarn fineness. Spinning, the core step converting prepared fibers to yarn, relied predominantly on the drop spindle—a handheld stick with a whorl for momentum—until the spinning wheel's introduction. Drop spindles enabled supported or suspended spinning, with the spinner drafting fibers while the weighted spindle twisted them, achieving yarns suitable for warp or weft; this method persisted from ancient times through the medieval period, as seen in Anglo-Saxon and Viking contexts where wool was plucked, teased, and spun with distaff-held fibers.[14] The spinning wheel, likely invented in India between 500 and 1000 CE, used a treadle or hand-driven flywheel to continuous-spin fibers via a bobbin, reaching Europe by the 13th century and boosting output by allowing seated operation, though drop spindles remained common for fine or portable work into the early modern era.[15] Yarns varied in thickness and twist direction (S- or Z-twist) based on end-use, with higher twists for stronger warps. Weaving interlocked spun yarns on looms ranging from simple frames to more advanced setups. Early types included backstrap looms, tensioned by the weaver's body, prevalent in ancient Americas and Asia for portable production, and warp-weighted looms in prehistoric Europe, where vertical warps hung from a beam and were held taut by clay or stone weights, allowing shedding via rods for plain or twill weaves.[16] Horizontal ground looms, with warps stretched between fixed beams, emerged in ancient Egypt and Mesopotamia around 3000 BCE, facilitating larger fabrics; by the medieval period in Europe, treadle-operated horizontal looms with heddles and reeds improved efficiency for woolen broadcloths.[17] Complex patterns, like those in Andean textiles from 2000 BCE, employed scaffold or tapestry weaves on upright looms, integrating spun yarns without mechanical aids.[18] Post-weaving finishing enhanced durability and appearance, including fulling—beating wool cloth in water or clay to shrink and felt fibers, a labor-intensive step often done by walking on submerged fabric in medieval Europe—and natural dyeing using plant, insect, or mineral sources like woad for blue or madder for red, fixed with mordants such as alum.[19] These techniques supported localized economies, with production scales limited by human labor; for instance, a skilled medieval spinner might produce 50-100 grams of yarn daily, constraining output to subsistence or trade levels until pre-industrial innovations like the 13th-century European treadle loom marginally increased capacity.[20] Regional variations persisted, such as silk reeling from cocoons in ancient China via heated basins to unwind filaments, but overall, pre-industrial methods emphasized empirical adaptation to local fibers and tools without powered machinery.[21]Industrial Revolution Transformations
The Industrial Revolution, commencing in Britain around 1760, fundamentally mechanized textile production, shifting it from decentralized cottage industries—where spinning and weaving occurred in households using hand tools—to centralized factories powered by machinery. This transition addressed bottlenecks in yarn supply created by earlier innovations like John Kay's flying shuttle in 1733, which accelerated weaving but outpaced manual spinning capabilities.[22][23] Key advancements in spinning included James Hargreaves' spinning jenny, invented in 1764, which enabled one worker to operate multiple spindles simultaneously via a hand-powered frame, initially producing eight threads and later scalable to dozens, though the yarn remained coarse and suitable mainly for weft.[24] Richard Arkwright's water frame, patented in 1769, marked a pivotal advance by using water power to drive rollers that produced stronger, finer warp yarn from cotton, facilitating continuous production and the integration of carding and drawing processes. Arkwright established the world's first successful water-powered cotton spinning mill at Cromford, Derbyshire, in 1771, employing around 300 workers by 1776 and exemplifying the factory system's emphasis on disciplined labor under one roof, powered by waterwheels rather than human or animal effort. Samuel Crompton's spinning mule, developed between 1775 and 1779, hybridized elements of the jenny and water frame to yield fine, strong yarn in large quantities, with early models handling up to 96 spindles; its adoption in factories amplified output, as mules could produce thread viable for both warp and weft.[25][26][27] Weaving mechanization followed with Edmund Cartwright's power loom, patented in 1785, which automated the shuttle's traversal using water or steam power, though initial models were unreliable and required refinements; by the 1790s, integrated factories combined powered spinning and weaving, drastically reducing production times—handloom weavers who once took days for a piece now competed with machines completing it in hours. Steam power, harnessed via James Watt's improved engine from 1769 onward, liberated mills from watercourse locations, enabling urban clustering in Lancashire and Yorkshire; by 1800, Britain's cotton consumption surged from negligible pre-1760 levels to over 50 million pounds annually, fueling export growth and capital accumulation that propelled broader industrialization.[28][29] Labor transformations were profound: factories drew rural migrants, including women and children, into regimented 12-14 hour shifts, with child labor comprising up to half the workforce in early mills due to their dexterity for machine tending; wages rose for skilled operatives but deskilled many, displacing independent spinners and exacerbating unemployment among handloom weavers until the 1820s. Economically, textiles accounted for over 20% of British exports by 1800, stimulating ancillary sectors like iron for machinery and coal for steam, though this concentration masked regional disparities and the human costs of rapid urbanization, including poor sanitation and exploitative conditions unsubstantiated by contemporary reformist exaggerations but evident in parliamentary inquiries.[30][29]20th Century Scale-Up
The early 20th century saw continued mechanization of textile processes building on 19th-century innovations, with automatic looms like the Northrop loom, introduced in 1889 by the Draper Corporation, achieving widespread adoption for their automatic bobbin-changing capability that boosted weaving efficiency. Over 700,000 units were sold globally by the mid-20th century, enabling mills to operate with reduced labor and higher output rates. This automation extended to spinning and carding, where powered machinery replaced manual operations, lowering production costs and facilitating larger-scale factory operations in regions like the American South and Europe. A pivotal advancement occurred with the development of synthetic fibers, beginning with rayon in the early 1900s but accelerating with nylon's invention in 1935 by Wallace Carothers at DuPont, based on polymer chemistry principles established by Hermann Staudinger.[31] Nylon was announced publicly on October 27, 1938, and first sold commercially on May 15, 1940, initially revolutionizing hosiery production with durable, sheer stockings that sold out rapidly—4,000 pairs in three hours at debut sales in Wilmington, Delaware.[32] During World War II, production shifted to military uses such as parachutes, but postwar resumption in 1945 projected annual output of 360 million stocking pairs, displacing silk imports and enabling mass-market apparel with properties like wrinkle resistance and quick drying.[32] Subsequent synthetics further scaled production: DuPont commercialized polyester in 1946 under the Dacron brand and acrylic in 1955 as Orlon, allowing fabrics with enhanced durability and ease of care that supported the rise of wash-and-wear clothing by 1949.[32] These materials reduced reliance on variable natural fiber supplies, such as cotton and wool, and permitted uniform quality in high-volume manufacturing, with synthetics comprising up to 63% of global textile fiber production by 1965. Innovations like spandex in 1958 added stretch capabilities, expanding into activewear and undergarments. Post-World War II economic prosperity drove unprecedented expansion, particularly in the United States and United Kingdom, where consumer demand for household fabrics and clothing surged amid rising incomes and suburbanization.[33] In the UK, the 1950s to 1970s represented a production peak, fueled by skilled labor, design innovation, and machinery upgrades that increased output efficiency.[34] American mills, leveraging synthetics and automation, met booming needs during the baby boom era, with companies like DuPont transforming textile composition through fibers like nylon and polyester, which enabled cheaper, more accessible garments and shifted production toward ready-to-wear formats.[35] This era's scale-up was evidenced by the integration of computer-aided design precursors and continuous processing lines, reducing downtime and amplifying throughput in integrated mills.Late 20th to Early 21st Century Shifts
The late 20th century saw accelerated offshoring of textile manufacturing from high-wage developed economies to low-labor-cost regions in Asia, driven by wage disparities and trade policy changes that favored import competition over domestic production. In the United States, apparel manufacturing employment peaked at over 1.4 million in 1973 but fell to under 200,000 by 2005, as firms relocated operations to countries like China, Bangladesh, and Vietnam where labor costs were fractions of U.S. levels—often below $0.50 per hour versus $10 or more domestically.[36][33] This shift was exacerbated by agreements such as NAFTA in 1994, which facilitated intra-regional trade but contributed to a net loss of U.S. textile jobs estimated at hundreds of thousands by the early 2000s.[33] A landmark policy change occurred on January 1, 2005, with the expiration of the Multi-Fiber Arrangement (MFA), a quota system under GATT and later the WTO that had regulated textile and apparel imports since 1974 to protect developed markets. The MFA's phase-out, mandated by the 1994 WTO Agreement on Textiles and Clothing (ATC), integrated the sector into global free trade rules, unleashing a surge in exports from quota-constrained exporters like China, whose textile shipments to the U.S. rose by over 50% in 2005 alone, capturing larger market shares and displacing production in higher-cost nations.[37][38] This liberalization intensified structural adjustments, with importing countries experiencing employment declines of 10-20% in apparel sectors post-2005, while beneficiaries like China expanded capacity through state-supported investments in efficient mills.[39][40] Concurrent with geographic relocation, the rise of fast fashion models transformed production dynamics, emphasizing rapid turnover and high-volume output enabled by fragmented global supply chains. Pioneered by retailers like Zara in the late 1970s and scaled by H&M and others in the 1990s, fast fashion shortened design-to-shelf cycles from months to weeks, doubling global clothing production from 2000 to 2014 and increasing per capita garment purchases by about 60%.[41] This demanded just-in-time manufacturing in low-cost hubs, relying on air freight for speed and synthetic fabrics for affordability, which boosted overall industry output but strained labor conditions in export zones with documented violations of worker rights.[41] Technological advancements provided partial offsets but could not fully counter cost-driven offshoring during this era. From the 1980s onward, computer-aided design (CAD) systems and automated looms improved efficiency in remaining high-end operations, reducing labor needs per yard of fabric by up to 30% in automated facilities, yet adoption was uneven as developing countries prioritized cheap manual labor over capital-intensive upgrades.[42] Synthetic fibers, particularly polyester, gained dominance, rising from roughly 40% of global fiber production in 1990 to over 50% by 2000, due to lower costs (often half that of cotton) and scalability in petrochemical-based processes, further favoring mass production in Asia where integrated chemical-textile complexes proliferated.[43] By the early 2010s, these trends had consolidated manufacturing in a handful of countries, with China accounting for over 40% of world textile output by volume.[44]Raw Materials
Natural Plant Fibers
Natural plant fibers, derived from cellulose-rich structures in various plant parts, constitute the predominant category of natural raw materials in textile manufacturing, offering biodegradability and renewability compared to synthetics. These fibers are classified by origin: seed-hair fibers like cotton from seed pods; bast fibers from phloem tissues in stems, including flax, hemp, jute, and ramie; leaf fibers such as sisal and abaca; and fruit-hair fibers like coir from coconut husks. Among them, cotton dominates, accounting for approximately 60% of natural fiber usage in textiles due to its versatility, while bast fibers provide strength for coarser applications.[45][46] Cotton (Gossypium spp.) fibers, harvested from the fluffy bolls surrounding seeds, undergo ginning to separate lint from seeds, yielding soft, absorbent staples 1-2 inches long with high moisture regain (8-10%) and tensile strength that increases when wet. Global production reached an estimated 117.8 million 480-pound bales in the 2024/25 marketing year, led by China (27%), India (20%), and Brazil (14%), though yields vary with irrigation and pest management. These properties make cotton ideal for apparel, towels, and bed linens, comprising over 25% of total global fiber production in 2023.[47][7] Flax (Linum usitatissimum) yields linen from bast bundles in stems, extracted via retting (water, dew, or chemical) followed by scutching and hackling to produce long, lustrous fibers with low elongation (2-3%) but high tenacity (5-6 g/denier), suited for crisp, durable fabrics like shirting and upholstery. Production is smaller-scale, concentrated in Europe and China, emphasizing its premium positioning over cotton for breathability in warm climates. Hemp (Cannabis sativa), another bast fiber, offers similar extraction but with finer, more uniform strands exhibiting natural antimicrobial resistance and UV stability, used in denim, canvas, and technical textiles; it yields 250-300% more fiber per hectare than cotton with less water. Jute (Corchorus spp.), coarse and lignocellulosic, is retted from stems for burlap sacks and carpet backing, with high insulating properties but poor durability in wet conditions.[48][49][46] Less common plant fibers include ramie (Boehmeria nivea), a bast type prized for its whiteness and strength (up to 7 g/denier) in blends for clothing and paper, and coir, which provides stiff, water-resistant ropes from coconut husks. Overall, natural plant fibers supported a market valued at USD 69.23 billion in 2024, driven by demand for sustainable alternatives, though challenges like variable fiber quality from weather-dependent harvests necessitate preprocessing like cleaning and blending before spinning.[50][51]Natural Animal Fibers
Natural animal fibers are proteinaceous materials derived from animals, primarily keratin in hair and wool or fibroin in silk, distinguished by their staple or filament forms and suitability for textile processing due to inherent crimp, elasticity, and moisture management. These fibers excel in insulation by trapping air within their structure and offer resilience against abrasion, making them ideal for durable yarns and fabrics in apparel and upholstery.[52] [53] [54] Wool, sourced from sheep via annual shearing, dominates animal fiber usage in textiles, with global clean production estimated at 1,051.2 million kilograms in 2022, reflecting a 1.5% increase from prior years driven by output gains in key regions like Australia and China. Fibers typically range from 20 to 40 micrometers in diameter and 5 to 30 centimeters in length, featuring a crimped, scaly cuticle that promotes interfiber cohesion during carding and spinning while enabling natural water repellency and elasticity for wrinkle-resistant fabrics.[55] [56] [57] Silk originates from the cocoons of Bombyx mori silkworms, harvested by boiling to release continuous filaments reeled into raw silk, bypassing traditional staple spinning for direct weaving or throwing into yarns. Worldwide raw silk output totaled 91,221 metric tons in 2022, down 30% from 2011 levels, with China producing over 80% of the supply amid declining global sericulture. Composed mainly of fibroin, silk boasts tensile strength surpassing steel on a weight basis, low density for lightweight textiles, and a smooth, lustrous surface from its prism-like cross-section, facilitating dye uptake and premium garment production.[58] [59] [60] [61] Specialty hairs such as cashmere from Kashmir goats and mohair from Angora goats are collected via combing or shearing, yielding finer, longer staples than standard wool for luxury applications. Cashmere fibers, averaging under 19 micrometers in diameter, deliver superior insulation per unit weight due to their scaled structure and low conductivity, while mohair's 25-45 micrometer diameter, high luster, and minimal felting support durable, shiny fabrics like suits and rugs. These fibers, produced in limited volumes—e.g., global cashmere at roughly 20,000 tons annually—require careful dehairing to separate undercoat from guard hairs, enhancing their value in high-end textile manufacturing despite higher processing costs.[62] [63] [64]Synthetic and Regenerated Fibers
Synthetic fibers are manufactured entirely from petrochemical-derived polymers, such as those produced through polymerization of monomers like ethylene glycol and terephthalic acid for polyester, and extruded via processes like melt spinning through spinnerets to form continuous filaments.[65] These fibers, including polyester, nylon, acrylic, and spandex, emerged prominently in the mid-20th century, with nylon first synthesized in 1935 by Wallace Carothers at DuPont and commercialized in 1939 for applications like hosiery.[32] Polyester followed in 1941, initially developed by British chemists John Rex Whinfield and James Dickson T. Dickie, enabling mass production of durable, wrinkle-resistant textiles that supplanted natural fibers in apparel and upholstery due to their tensile strength and low moisture absorption.[66] Major synthetic types dominate global output: polyester accounts for over half of synthetic fiber production, valued for its resistance to stretching, shrinking, and abrasion; nylon offers high elasticity and abrasion resistance but absorbs more moisture than polyester; acrylic mimics wool's warmth with low density and sunlight resistance; and spandex provides exceptional stretch recovery due to its polyurethane composition, comprising up to 95% elastic polymer segments.[66] Production involves converting nonrenewable feedstocks like oil into monomers, followed by polymerization and spinning, yielding fibers with consistent properties but high environmental costs, including 27.2 kg of CO2 equivalents emitted per kg of polyester.[65] Regenerated fibers, in contrast, derive from natural polymers like cellulose extracted from wood pulp or bamboo, chemically dissolved (e.g., via carbon disulfide for viscose) and extruded to reform filaments, bridging natural and synthetic characteristics with improved absorbency over pure synthetics.[67] Viscose rayon, the primary example, was first commercially produced in 1905 in Britain and scaled in the U.S. by 1910 using wood pulp treated with sodium hydroxide and carbon disulfide, yielding soft, silk-like fibers prone to weakening when wet.[68] Other variants include modal (high-tenacity cellulose) and lyocell (solvent-spun for reduced chemical use), both regenerated via dissolution but with lyocell employing non-toxic N-methylmorpholine N-oxide for a closed-loop process that recycles 99% of the solvent.[69] In 2023, global fiber production hit 124 million tonnes, with synthetics comprising about 75%—a surge of over 300% since 1996 compared to 24% growth for naturals—driven by polyester's low cost and versatility in fast fashion, while regenerated cellulosics reached a market value of USD 44.2 billion, projected to grow to USD 72.8 billion by 2030 amid demand for semi-natural alternatives.[7][70][71] These fibers enable scalable textile output but raise concerns over resource depletion and pollution, as synthetic production relies on finite petroleum and regenerated processes generate hazardous byproducts like hydrogen sulfide unless mitigated by advanced methods.[65]Primary Processing
Fiber Preparation and Cleaning
Fiber preparation and cleaning constitutes the initial stage in primary processing, where raw fibers are opened from compressed forms, impurities such as dirt, seeds, vegetable matter, grease, and short fibers are removed, and the fiber mass is conditioned for blending and further mechanical treatment. This process employs mechanical, pneumatic, and sometimes chemical methods to minimize fiber damage while achieving cleanliness levels that directly influence yarn evenness and strength; inadequate cleaning can introduce defects like neps or uneven dyeing. Industrial systems prioritize efficiency, with automated machinery reducing labor and contamination risks compared to manual methods.[72][73] For cotton, preparation follows ginning, where baled lint is fed into automatic openers that loosen the tightly packed fibers using spikes or grids, followed by multi-stage cleaning. Coarse cleaning employs rotating saw cylinders or beaters to agitate the fiber tufts, dislodging heavy trash (up to 5-10% by weight in unginned equivalents), which is extracted via air suction or perforated screens. Subsequent fine cleaners use gentler beaters and higher air velocities to remove finer particles like leaf fragments and dust, reducing total trash to below 0.5% while preserving fiber length. Modern installations incorporate electronic sensors for real-time trash monitoring, processing up to 100 bales per hour in high-volume mills.[72][74][73] Wool preparation centers on scouring to eliminate lanolin (yolk), suint (dried sweat salts), dirt, and vegetable matter, which comprise 20-50% of greasy wool weight depending on breed and conditions. In continuous industrial scouring, raw wool passes through 6-8 bowls of emulsified detergent solutions at 50-65°C, where mechanical rakes or conveyors agitate the stock for 10-20 minutes per bowl, followed by hot water rinses and hydroextraction. Emulsifiers break down the water-repellent grease, enabling recovery of lanolin as a valuable byproduct (up to 10% yield), while dried scoured wool achieves 99% purity for spinning. Carbonizing with acid and heat may precede scouring for heavy burr removal in coarse wools.[75][76] Synthetic staple fibers, produced via melt or solution spinning, require minimal cleaning as extrusion yields uniform, impurity-free filaments that are drawn, crimped, and cut into staple lengths (typically 25-76 mm). Any residual spin finishes or oligomers are removed by aqueous washing or heat treatment post-cutting, ensuring compatibility with natural fiber blends; for instance, polyester tow is rinsed to eliminate less than 1% processing aids before baling. This contrasts with natural fibers, as synthetics avoid biological contaminants but demand precise control to prevent degradation from over-cleaning.[77][78]Blending and Carding
Blending in textile manufacturing entails the mechanical integration of disparate fiber types or qualities, such as varying cotton grades or natural-synthetic combinations, in predetermined ratios to engineer yarn attributes including tensile strength, dye uptake, and economic viability. This preparatory step, often executed within the blow room apparatus, utilizes bale openers and mixing feeders to progressively open fiber tufts from multiple sources, thereby minimizing variability and promoting homogeneity prior to downstream operations.[79] For instance, producers may blend 2 to 3 cotton cultivars in ratios tailored to staple length and micronaire values, optimizing for yarn evenness and reducing defects like thick/thin places during spinning.[80] Intimate blending at the fiber level, as opposed to yarn-level mixing, ensures synergistic properties, such as enhanced durability in cotton-polyester blends where polyester contributes abrasion resistance while cotton imparts breathability.[81] Alternative blending techniques include draw frame integration or direct carding machine feeds, where dual fiber laps are concurrently processed to achieve uniform dispersion without intermediate storage, particularly advantageous for high-volume synthetic-natural hybrids.[82] Effective blending mitigates raw material inconsistencies, with empirical studies indicating that poor mixing elevates coefficient of variation in yarn mass by up to 20%, directly correlating to fabric defects.[81] Carding succeeds blending by systematically disentangling the amalgamated fiber mass, excising contaminants like dust, seeds, and short fibers (typically under 12.7 mm), and orienting longer staples into a cohesive, attenuated sliver for subsequent drawing. The carding machine, comprising a licker-in roller, main cylinder, doffer, and flats arrayed with fine wire clothing, operates on differential surface speeds—reaching 1,000-1,500 m/min on the cylinder—to induce fiber-to-fiber friction and parallelization without excessive breakage.[83] This action eliminates neps (entangled fiber knots) at rates exceeding 80% removal efficiency in modern setups equipped with autolevellers, while producing a web drafted to 10-20 g/m sliver weight.[84] The process's efficacy hinges on precise control of parameters like cylinder loading and flat speed, where deviations can amplify fiber damage or unevenness, quantified by nep count metrics in quality assessments. In wool or synthetic processing, carding additionally condenses the web into rovings via condensers, preparing for worsted or woolen spinning paths.[79] Overall, carding bridges raw preparation to yarn formation, with fiber parallelism post-carding typically achieving 85-90% orientation, foundational to yarn tenacity.[84]Yarn Spinning Methods
Yarn spinning transforms prepared fiber slivers or rovings into continuous strands by drafting, imparting twist, and winding onto bobbins, enabling subsequent fabric formation. Industrial methods primarily include ring spinning, rotor (open-end) spinning, and air-jet (vortex) spinning, each balancing yarn quality, production speed, and cost based on fiber type and end-use requirements.[85][86] Ring spinning, the dominant method since its commercialization in the 1830s following earlier frame developments, drafts fibers via successive roller pairs and inserts twist through a rapidly rotating traveler on a ring, winding the yarn onto a spindle bobbin. This process aligns fibers parallelly, yielding high-tenacity yarns with excellent uniformity, suitable for fine counts below 20 Ne and diverse fibers like cotton or wool. Production speeds typically reach 20-30 meters per minute, constrained by traveler dynamics and ring friction, though modern variants with lighter travelers exceed 35 m/min. Advantages encompass superior yarn strength (up to 20-30% higher than alternatives) and versatility for premium fabrics; disadvantages include higher energy use, frequent doffing, and lower throughput compared to newer systems.[87][88] Rotor or open-end spinning, pioneered in the 1960s and matured by the 1980s, opens fiber slivers via high-speed beaters, feeds individualized fibers into a rotating cup (rotor) at 150,000-300,000 rpm, and forms yarn by centrifugal force drawing fibers against the rotor wall before peeling and winding. This enables sliver-to-yarn direct processing at speeds 6-8 times faster than ring (up to 200-250 m/min), reducing labor and space needs. Yarns exhibit bulkier structure with shorter fibers on the surface, limiting fineness to coarser counts above 20 Ne and reducing strength by 20-40% due to poorer parallelism, though suitable for denim or towels where evenness suffices. Energy efficiency improves from eliminated twisting elements, but hairiness and imperfections rise, necessitating post-treatments.[88][89][90] Air-jet or vortex spinning, introduced commercially in 1980 and refined in vortex systems by the 1990s, drafts fibers and propels them into a nozzle where compressed air (at 5-7 bar) creates swirling vortices to wrap outer fibers around an untwisted core, eliminating traditional spindles. Speeds attain 300-500 m/min—up to 20 times ring rates—via continuous sliver feed and minimal breaks, cutting ends-down time by 50-70%. Resulting yarns mimic ring-spun aesthetics with low hairiness and pilling resistance, ideal for medium counts (20-40 Ne) in apparel like shirts, but core fibers carry less twist, capping ultimate strength for fine or high-load applications. Vortex variants enhance core compaction for better evenness, though initial equipment costs exceed ring setups by 20-30%. Adoption has grown for efficiency in cotton-dominant regions, comprising 10-15% of global short-staple capacity by 2020.[91][92][93]Fabric Production
Weaving Processes
Weaving produces fabric through the interlacing of warp yarns, held longitudinally under tension on a loom, with weft yarns inserted transversely.[94] This process dates back millennia but saw mechanization in the 18th century with English inventors automating weaving alongside spinning and carding.[95] In industrial settings, preparatory steps include winding yarns onto bobbins, warping to arrange parallel warp ends on a beam, and sizing to apply starch or synthetic coatings strengthening the warp against abrasion during weaving.[96] The core weaving operations consist of four primary motions: shedding, where selected warp yarns are raised or lowered to form a shed; picking or filling, inserting the weft yarn through the shed; beating-up, using a reed to pack the weft into the fabric edge; and take-up with let-off, winding the woven cloth onto a cloth beam while releasing warp from the warp beam to maintain tension.[94][97] These motions repeat cyclically, with plain weave—the simplest structure—alternating warp and weft over-under in a balanced grid pattern, while twill creates diagonal ribs via offset interlacing, and satin achieves a smooth surface through extended floats minimizing interlacings.[97] Modern shuttleless looms dominate production for efficiency, including rapier looms that use grippers to carry weft across the shed, air-jet looms propelling weft via compressed air streams, water-jet looms employing water jets for soluble yarns, and projectile looms launching small shuttles.[98] These technologies, controlled by microprocessors monitoring breaks and optimizing operations, enable speeds exceeding 1,000 insertions per minute, reducing labor and energy use while boosting productivity over traditional shuttle looms.[98][99]Knitting Techniques
Knitting produces fabric by interlooping yarn into vertical wales and horizontal courses of interconnected loops, distinct from weaving by its loop-based structure that imparts elasticity and flexibility.[100] In industrial textile manufacturing, knitting techniques are categorized primarily into weft and warp methods, each employing specialized machines to form fabrics for apparel, hosiery, and technical textiles.[101] Weft knitting utilizes a single continuous yarn fed horizontally to form successive courses of loops, pulled through previous rows by needles, resulting in high extensibility in both directions but vulnerability to laddering if a loop breaks.[102] Common subtypes include single jersey, which produces a smooth one-sided fabric used in T-shirts; rib, featuring alternating knit and purl stitches for enhanced stretch and recovery, as in cuffs and collars; and interlock, a double-layer structure for denser, reversible fabrics.[103] Industrial weft knitting occurs on circular machines, which produce seamless tubular fabrics at speeds up to 40 revolutions per minute, or flat machines for shaped panels in garments.[104] Warp knitting, by contrast, employs multiple yarns arranged vertically as warp, where each yarn forms a loop interlocking diagonally with adjacent loops in contiguous wales, yielding fabrics with greater dimensional stability, run resistance, and shape retention but reduced widthwise elasticity.[101] [102] Predominant machines include tricot, generating fine, smooth fabrics for lingerie and outerwear via two guide bars and speeds exceeding 2000 courses per minute, and raschel, which uses up to 8 guide bars for openwork patterns like lace and nets in curtains or sportswear.[104] Warp techniques excel in producing technical textiles, such as geogrids for soil stabilization, due to their ability to incorporate varied yarn types and structures without unraveling.[101] Both techniques have evolved with automation; modern machines integrate electronic controls for pattern variation and efficiency, with weft processes dominating apparel output at approximately 80% of global knit fabric production as of 2023.[105] Selection between weft and warp depends on end-use requirements, with weft favored for comfort-driven garments and warp for durability in industrial applications.[102]Non-Woven and Alternative Methods
Non-woven fabrics constitute a major class of textiles engineered by assembling fibers or filaments into a web structure and consolidating them without the yarn interlacing characteristic of weaving or knitting. This approach enables rapid production and versatility in properties like absorbency, filtration, and barrier functions, with global output exceeding 13 million tons annually as of recent industry estimates. The core process encompasses web formation, where fibers are oriented into a loose mat, followed by bonding to impart strength, and optional finishing for specific end-uses.[106] Web formation methods vary by fiber type and application. Dry-laid processes mechanically orient staple fibers via carding, which aligns them parallel, or airlaying, which disperses them randomly for isotropic webs, suitable for recycled or natural fibers. Wet-laid techniques suspend fibers in a water slurry, depositing them onto a moving screen akin to papermaking, yielding uniform webs for hygiene products. Spunlaid methods, dominant in disposable goods, extrude molten polymers directly into continuous filaments: spunbonding draws polypropylene or polyester filaments onto a conveyor for point-bonded fabrics, while meltblowing produces finer microfibers through high-velocity hot air, ideal for filtration masks as evidenced by their widespread use in PPE during the 2020 pandemic.[107][108][106] Bonding consolidates the web through mechanical, thermal, or chemical means. Mechanical entanglement includes needlepunching, where barbed needles pierce the web to interlock fibers, producing durable felts for geotextiles; and hydroentanglement (spunlacing), which uses high-pressure water jets for soft, strong webs without additives, as in medical wipes. Thermal bonding fuses fibers via heated calender rolls or air streams, relying on thermoplastic content for applications like diapers. Chemical bonding applies resins or latex for cohesion but may compromise breathability. These methods allow non-wovens to achieve tensile strengths comparable to knits in some cases, with production speeds up to 800 meters per minute in spunbond lines.[109][110] Alternative methods beyond standard non-woven processes include felting, a mechanical matting technique dating to over 6,000 years BCE among Asian nomads, where wool fibers interlock via friction, moisture, and agitation without machinery. Modern variants like electrospinning generate nanofiber mats by electrifying polymer solutions into jets that solidify into webs, enabling ultra-fine structures for advanced filtration or biomedical scaffolds since the technique's refinement in the 1990s. Laminating adheres non-wovens to other substrates via adhesives or heat for composite materials, while emerging techniques like 3D printing deposit fiber-like extrusions for customized structures, though scalability remains limited. The term "nonwoven" emerged in 1942 amid U.S. wartime innovations, with commercial scale-up post-1945 driven by disposables demand.[111][112]Finishing Processes
Preparatory Treatments
Preparatory treatments in textile finishing remove manufacturing residues, natural impurities, and processing aids from greige fabric to ensure uniform wettability, absorbency, and receptivity for subsequent dyeing, printing, or mechanical finishes. These processes, applied after weaving or knitting, target contaminants such as warp sizing, oils, waxes, pectins, and proteins, which if left unaddressed would cause uneven coloration or reduced fabric quality. Common steps include singeing, desizing, scouring, bleaching, and optional mercerization or heat setting, with methods varying by fiber type—alkaline for cellulosics like cotton and milder for synthetics or proteins.[113][114][76] Singeing involves passing fabric over gas flames or heated plates at speeds of 80–150 m/min to burn off protruding fibers and fuzz, reducing pilling and creating a smoother surface for even finishing. This mechanical-thermal process precedes wet treatments to minimize loose particles that could clog equipment.[113] Desizing hydrolyzes and solubilizes starch-based or synthetic sizing agents applied to warp yarns during weaving for abrasion resistance, accounting for up to 50% of biochemical oxygen demand in effluents if not managed. Enzymatic methods using α-amylase at 60–80°C and pH 6–7 break down starches into dextrins and sugars, offering an eco-friendly alternative to oxidative chemicals like sodium bromite, which can degrade fibers if overused.[76][113] Scouring employs alkaline solutions, typically 2–5% sodium hydroxide (NaOH) at 90–100°C for 45–60 minutes, to saponify waxes, emulsify oils, and disperse pectins via detergency and hydrolysis, enhancing fabric hydrophilicity. Surfactants and chelating agents like EDTA sequester metals (e.g., iron, calcium) that cause spotting, while for cotton, this step often combines with desizing in continuous pad-batch systems.[76][114] Bleaching oxidizes colored impurities for a neutral base, using hydrogen peroxide (H₂O₂) at 1–3% concentration under alkaline conditions (pH 10–11) with stabilizers like sodium silicate to prevent yellowing or strength loss, achieving whiteness indices above 70 for light shades. Chlorine-based agents like sodium hypochlorite are less common due to fiber damage risks, with peroxide preferred for its milder action on cellulosics.[114][76][113] Mercerization, specific to cotton, treats fabric with 18–30% caustic soda under tension at 15–30°C for 1–5 minutes, swelling fibers from elliptical to cylindrical cross-sections, boosting tensile strength by 20–30%, luster, and dye affinity by altering cellulose crystallinity. Post-treatment neutralization and rinsing restore neutrality. Heat setting for synthetics like polyester involves dry heating at 180–220°C for 30–60 seconds to fix dimensional stability and relieve internal stresses.[114][113] Rinsing and neutralization follow all wet steps, using hot water cascades to eliminate residuals, with pH adjusted to 6–7 via acetic acid to prevent hydrolysis in dyeing; absorbency tests confirm efficacy, targeting drop penetration under 3 seconds. These treatments collectively reduce defects like barré or uneven dyeing, with enzymatic advances minimizing water and energy use compared to traditional chemical methods.[114][76]Dyeing and Printing
Dyeing applies colorants to textiles through immersion or other application methods, enabling uniform or patterned coloration while ensuring properties like lightfastness and washfastness via chemical bonding or fixation. Synthetic dyes, discovered in 1856 by William Henry Perkin during an attempt to synthesize quinine, marked the shift from inconsistent natural extracts to scalable, predictable alternatives, with mauveine as the first commercial aniline-based dye. Dyes are classified by fiber type and application: reactive dyes form covalent bonds with cellulosic fibers like cotton, achieving high wet fastness; disperse dyes dissolve in synthetic fibers such as polyester via heat-induced diffusion; direct dyes provide substantivity to cellulose through ionic attraction but require after-treatments for durability; vat dyes, used for indigo on denim, involve reduction to a soluble leuco form followed by oxidation. The global textile dyes market reached approximately USD 10.13 billion in 2024, driven by demand in apparel and home textiles.[115][116][117] Dyeing stages align with production sequences for efficiency: dope or solution dyeing incorporates pigments into the polymer melt or solution before fiber extrusion, minimizing wastewater but limiting color changes; stock or fiber dyeing treats loose staple fibers, suitable for blends; yarn dyeing processes skeins, hanks, or beams, allowing complex patterns in woven fabrics; piece dyeing colors greige fabric post-weaving, offering flexibility for large runs but risking creasing; garment dyeing finishes assembled items, ideal for fashion responsiveness though challenging for seams. Batch methods, such as jet dyeing, circulate dye liquor through fabric in high-pressure jets for even penetration; jig dyeing winds fabric on rollers for back-and-forth immersion; beam dyeing handles delicate fabrics on perforated beams. Continuous processes, like pad-batch or pad-steam, apply dye via rollers followed by fixation in steam chambers, enabling high-speed production for staples like towels.[118][119][120] Printing imparts localized designs using resists, thickeners, or inks, contrasting dyeing's all-over coverage. Techniques evolved from manual block printing, carving motifs into wood or linoleum for hand-stamping, to mechanized rotary screen printing, which uses nickel mesh cylinders etched with patterns and squeezes paste through as fabric advances, dominating mass production since the mid-20th century for its speed and repeatability. Flatbed screen printing employs squeegees on taut screens for smaller runs or prototypes. Digital inkjet printing, emerging commercially in the 1990s, propels micro-droplets of reactive or pigment inks directly onto fabric via computer-controlled nozzles, bypassing screens for on-demand customization and reducing setup waste, though limited by slower speeds and higher per-unit costs. Other methods include heat transfer printing, sublimating dyes from paper to polyester under heat and pressure; discharge printing, removing background color with reducing agents to reveal white or overdyed patterns; and pigment printing, applying opaque pastes cured with binders for non-cellulosics. Selection depends on fabric type, run length, and design complexity, with screen methods handling up to 90% of industrial volume for their cost-effectiveness in bulk.[121][122]Final Mechanical and Chemical Finishes
Final mechanical finishes modify fabric structure through physical means such as heat, pressure, or abrasion, without altering chemical composition, to improve appearance, texture, or dimensional stability.[123] Common techniques include calendering, where fabric passes between heated rollers under high pressure—typically 10 to 50 tons per linear inch—to flatten yarns, enhance luster, and reduce thickness by up to 10-15% for applications like cotton shirting.[124] Sanforizing, a compressive shrinkage process developed in the 1930s, mechanically pre-shrinks fabric by stretching and compressing it against a rubber belt, limiting residual shrinkage to under 1% after laundering, essential for denim and workwear.[125] Napping or raising uses wire brushes or rollers to lift fiber ends, creating a soft, insulating nap on fabrics like flannel, increasing bulk by 20-30% while improving thermal retention but potentially reducing strength by 5-10%.[126] Shearing trims protruding fibers with helical blades, ensuring uniform surface for pile fabrics, while sueding abrades the surface with emery rollers for a peach-skin effect on knits.[127] Chemical finishes apply reactive or non-reactive agents via padding, exhaustion, or spraying, followed by drying and curing at 100-180°C, to impart durable functional properties like repellency or resistance.[128] Softening agents, such as cationic silicones or fatty acid emulsions, reduce inter-fiber friction by 20-50%, yielding a supple hand tested via Kawabata Evaluation System for bending rigidity under 0.1 cN·cm²/cm.[129] Water-repellent finishes employ fluoropolymers or silicone emulsions, forming hydrophobic coatings that achieve contact angles over 120° per ASTM D1388, though durability fades after 20-50 washes without crosslinking.[130] Flame-retardant treatments use phosphorus-based compounds or brominated additives, meeting standards like ASTM D6413 for char length under 6 inches in vertical burn tests, applied at 5-15% add-on weight for protective apparel.[131] Wrinkle-resistant finishes involve dimethylol-ethylene urea resins, cross-linking cellulose to boost crease recovery angles to 250-300° per AATCC 66, but may release formaldehyde up to 75 ppm initially, declining with laundering.[128] Anti-static agents, like polyalkylene glycols, lower surface resistivity to 10^9-10^11 ohms per ISO 9073-10, preventing charge buildup in synthetics.[132] These finishes are sequenced—often mechanical after chemical for surface refinement—and verified against ISO 6330 laundering protocols to ensure performance retention, with mechanical methods offering reversibility unlike chemical bonds that persist through 50+ cycles.[133] Trade-offs include mechanical finishes' potential fiber damage versus chemical finishes' environmental costs from effluents, prompting plasma or enzymatic alternatives for sustainability.[134]Modern Technologies
Automation and Digital Integration
Automation in textile manufacturing has advanced significantly since the late 20th century, with robotic systems and mechanized equipment replacing manual labor in repetitive tasks such as fabric cutting, sewing, and material handling. Automated cutting machines, utilizing computer-aided design (CAD) patterns, achieve precision that minimizes fabric waste to levels below 5% in optimized setups, compared to 10-15% in traditional methods. [135] [136] Robotic arms in sewing operations perform intricate stitching at speeds up to 24/7 without fatigue, enabling production rates that exceed manual capabilities by factors of 2-3 in high-volume facilities. [137] [138] In weaving and knitting, intelligent looms and automated knitting machines incorporate sensors to adjust tension and detect yarn breaks in real time, reducing downtime by up to 30%. [139] [140] The global market for automation in the textile industry is projected to grow by USD 664 million from 2024 to 2029, at a compound annual growth rate (CAGR) of 3.2%, driven by demands for efficiency in labor-intensive processes. [141] These technologies, including advanced robotics under Industry 4.0 frameworks, enhance scalability and product consistency, though adoption varies by region, with higher implementation in developed markets due to capital availability. [142] [143] Digital integration complements automation through interconnected systems like the Internet of Things (IoT), artificial intelligence (AI), and big data analytics, enabling smart factories where machines communicate for predictive maintenance and process optimization. IoT sensors monitor parameters such as fabric tension, machine temperature, and color consistency, allowing real-time adjustments that improve quality control and reduce defects by 20-40% in integrated systems. [144] [145] AI algorithms analyze production data to forecast equipment failures, minimizing unplanned downtime, as seen in Indian textile hubs where data from over 500 machines informed maintenance models. [146] [147] As of 2024, approximately 37.74% of textile facilities feature digital systems capable of automatic responses to real-time production changes, reflecting gradual Industry 4.0 adoption amid challenges like high initial costs and skill gaps. [148] Related digital advancements, such as in textile printing, show a market valued at USD 5,800.3 million in 2024, expected to reach USD 11,596.4 million by 2030 at a CAGR of 12.7%, underscoring the shift toward data-driven customization and efficiency. [149] Examples include H&M's AI-optimized supply chains for waste reduction and Pacific Textiles' real-time analytics for fabric color accuracy. [150] [151] This integration fosters causal improvements in throughput and resource use, though empirical outcomes depend on robust data infrastructure rather than technology alone. [152]Sustainable Production Innovations
Innovations in sustainable textile production focus on minimizing resource depletion, waste generation, and emissions through technologies that enable circular material flows and reduced reliance on finite inputs. Waterless dyeing processes, such as supercritical carbon dioxide (scCO2) dyeing developed by DyeCoo since 2010, eliminate water use in coloration by infusing dyes into fabrics under high-pressure CO2 conditions, potentially saving up to 95% of water compared to traditional methods while recycling 99% of the CO2 solvent.[153] [154] Similarly, ECOHUES technology, introduced in 2024 by Exponent Envirotech in partnership with Lenzing and Cobalt Fashion, applies non-aqueous solvents to cellulosic fibers like TENCEL, reusing 99.8% of the medium and avoiding wastewater discharge.[155] The global waterless dyeing market reached USD 348.9 million in 2024 and is projected to grow at a 9.2% CAGR through 2034, driven by regulatory pressures on water-intensive processes that consume 200-400 liters per kilogram of fabric in conventional dyeing.[156] Bio-based fibers represent another advancement, deriving from renewable sources like algae, mycelium, or agricultural waste to replace petroleum-derived synthetics. For instance, mycelium-based textiles, produced by companies like Mylo (Bolt Threads), cultivate fungal networks into leather-like materials that biodegrade fully, offering a 90% lower carbon footprint than animal leather according to lifecycle assessments.[157] Engineered bio-fibers from microorganisms, as explored in EU-funded projects, enable scalable production via fermentation, with properties matching cotton or polyester while requiring 50-70% less land and water.[158] These materials address the textile industry's reliance on virgin polyester, which constitutes 54% of global fiber production and contributes to microplastic pollution, by providing drop-in alternatives compatible with existing machinery.[159] Peer-reviewed analyses confirm bio-based fibers' potential for biodegradability, though scalability challenges persist due to higher initial costs—up to 2-3 times that of synthetics.[160] Closed-loop recycling systems further enhance sustainability by reclaiming post-consumer textiles into high-quality fibers, reducing virgin material demand by up to 100% in ideal cycles. Evrnu's NuCycl process, commercialized since 2015, chemically depolymerizes cotton blends into cellulose for new yarns, achieving fiber regeneration with properties equivalent to virgin cotton and diverting waste from landfills.[161] Gabriel Loop, launched in 2023, implements take-back programs for polyester textiles, mechanically and chemically recycling them into traceable new fabrics, with pilot scales processing thousands of tons annually.[162] Integration of renewable energy sources, such as solar photovoltaic systems, supports these processes; a 2025 case study of Indian textile plants showed electrification and solar thermal replacing coal-fired boilers, cutting energy costs by 20-30% and CO2 emissions by 40%.[163] Despite these gains, adoption lags due to capital barriers and inconsistent waste sorting, with only 1% of textiles currently recycled into new fibers globally.[164] Empirical data from industry trials indicate that combining these innovations could reduce the sector's 1.2 billion tons of annual CO2-equivalent emissions by 20-50% by 2030, contingent on policy incentives and supply chain collaboration.[165]Economic Impacts
Global Industry Metrics
The global textile manufacturing industry, encompassing the production of fibers, yarns, and fabrics, generated an estimated value added of US$293.81 billion in 2025, reflecting its role as a foundational segment of materials processing.[166] Fiber production, a primary input metric, achieved a record 124 million metric tons in 2023, driven predominantly by synthetic fibers such as polyester, which outpaced natural fibers in volume and growth.[7] This output supports downstream sectors like apparel, with Asia commanding the majority of capacity due to cost advantages in labor and scale.[167] Production is highly concentrated geographically, with China leading as the largest manufacturer, followed by India, Bangladesh, Vietnam, and Turkey. These countries account for the bulk of global exports, which serve as a proxy for manufacturing scale given integrated supply chains. In 2024, top exporters collectively shipped textiles valued at over $592 billion, underscoring Asia's dominance amid shifts from labor arbitrage and policy incentives like subsidies in China.[168]| Country | Export Value (2024, USD billion) |
|---|---|
| China | 301 |
| Vietnam | 44 |
| Bangladesh | 38.48 |
| India | ~76.5 (production proxy) |
| Turkey | Significant share in top 5 |
Trade and Supply Chain Realities
China dominates global textile exports, accounting for approximately $265 billion in value as of recent fiscal year data, representing over 30% of worldwide textile trade.[168] Other leading exporters include Bangladesh, Vietnam, India, and Turkey, with Asia collectively supplying more than 70% of textiles and apparel to major importing markets like the United States and European Union.[172] This concentration stems from offshoring driven by labor cost differentials; average manufacturing wages in China rose to about $6-8 per hour by 2023, yet remain far below Western levels, while countries like Bangladesh and Vietnam offer rates under $0.50 per hour, enabling cost-competitive production scales unattainable in high-wage economies.[173] [174]| Top Textile Exporting Countries (Approximate Annual Value, USD Billion) |
|---|
| China: 265 |
| Bangladesh: 40-45 (apparel-focused) |
| Vietnam: 35-40 |
| India: 30-35 |
| Turkey: 20-25 |
Contributions to Development
Textile manufacturing has served as an entry point for industrialization in numerous developing economies, providing labor-intensive employment opportunities that require minimal initial capital and skills, thereby facilitating rapid workforce absorption and foreign exchange earnings through exports. In countries with abundant low-skilled labor, the sector's low barriers to entry enable the transition from agriculture to manufacturing, fostering economic diversification and infrastructure development. For instance, export-oriented textile production has driven gross domestic product (GDP) growth by integrating nations into global value chains, where apparel assembly often precedes more complex industries.[182] Globally, the textiles and clothing industry accounts for approximately 3.7% of world merchandise exports as of 2022, with developing countries increasing their share of apparel exports from 25% in the mid-1960s to over 70% by 2014, reflecting a structural shift from high-income to low-wage producers. The sector employs an estimated 60 to 70 million people directly in garments and apparel, extending to over 300 million when including upstream textile activities, predominantly in Asia and Africa. This scale underscores its role in absorbing surplus rural labor, particularly among women, who comprise a significant portion of the workforce in export hubs.[167][182][183] In Bangladesh, the ready-made garments (RMG) subsector exemplifies these contributions, employing over 4 million workers—primarily women—and generating 85% of the country's export revenue while contributing 15% to GDP as of 2024, with annual exports exceeding $40 billion. This export-led model has propelled Bangladesh from one of the world's poorest nations in the 1970s to lower-middle-income status, reducing poverty rates from 56.7% in 1991 to 20.5% in 2019, largely through RMG job creation that raised household incomes and enabled remittances to rural areas. Similarly, in Vietnam, the textile and garment industry accounts for up to 16% of GDP and employs about 5 million workers, or 12% of the industrial workforce, supporting export growth that reached $44 billion in apparel in 2022 and aiding the country's ascent to upper-middle-income classification by 2010.[184][185][186][187] Empirical studies confirm the sector's poverty-alleviating effects via employment multipliers, as analyzed in World Bank research across five apparel-exporting countries including Bangladesh and Cambodia, where expansions in garment exports correlated with higher female labor participation, wage gains for entrants, and measurable reductions in household poverty, though benefits were concentrated in urban and peri-urban zones. In Ethiopia, emerging textile investments since 2010 have created over 100,000 jobs in industrial parks, attracting foreign direct investment and laying groundwork for broader manufacturing ecosystems. These dynamics illustrate how textile manufacturing catalyzes human capital accumulation—through on-the-job training—and fiscal revenues that fund public goods, positioning it as a foundational driver of sustained development despite challenges like skill upgrading.[186]Environmental Realities
Resource and Energy Use
The textile manufacturing sector consumes substantial quantities of water, primarily during fiber production, dyeing, and finishing processes. Globally, the industry withdraws approximately 93 billion cubic meters of freshwater annually, equivalent to the water use of over 40 million average U.S. households.[188] For cotton-based textiles, which constitute a major share of natural fiber production, manufacturing 1 kilogram of fabric requires an average of 5,961.7 kilograms of water, with variations from 0 to 29,000 kilograms per kilogram depending on irrigation methods and regional practices; this figure encompasses cultivation, where 73% of global cotton fields rely on flood irrigation.[189] Synthetic fibers like polyester generally demand less direct water in production compared to cotton, as they derive from petrochemical processes rather than agriculture, though upstream oil extraction indirectly influences resource allocation.[190] Energy demands in textile manufacturing arise from mechanical processes such as spinning, weaving, and chemical treatments, with wet processing (including dyeing and finishing) accounting for about 37% of sector-wide energy use, followed by yarn production at 22%. Overall, global textile supply chains generated 1.7 billion metric tons of CO2-equivalent emissions in recent assessments, representing roughly 10% of total anthropogenic greenhouse gas emissions and reflecting heavy reliance on fossil fuels for heating, electricity, and synthetic fiber synthesis.[191] Polyester production, dominant at 57% of the 124 million tonnes of global fiber output in 2023, exhibits higher energy intensity per garment than cotton; for instance, a polyester shirt's lifecycle emits 5.5 kilograms of CO2, versus 4.3 kilograms for cotton, due to petroleum-derived feedstocks and polymerization energy requirements.[190][7] Raw material inputs further underscore resource intensity, with natural fibers like cotton requiring vast arable land and fertilizers—global cotton production alone occupies about 2.5% of cultivated land—while synthetics depend on non-renewable petroleum, comprising over half of fiber inputs and linking textile demands to volatile oil markets. These patterns persist despite regional variations; for example, in energy-constrained developing economies, coal and natural gas dominate, amplifying both consumption and emissions profiles. Empirical data from industry reports indicate limited decoupling of production growth from resource escalation, as fiber output doubled since 2000 to 124 million tonnes by 2023 without proportional efficiency gains in baseline processes.[192]Pollution Outputs
Textile manufacturing generates substantial wastewater, primarily from wet processing stages such as scouring, bleaching, dyeing, and finishing, with an average discharge of 100-200 liters per kilogram of fabric processed.[193] [194] This effluent is characterized by high chemical oxygen demand (COD) levels often exceeding 1,000-5,000 mg/L, biological oxygen demand (BOD) up to 2,000 mg/L, intense coloration from unfixed dyes (typically 10-15% of applied dyes), and elevated suspended solids, alongside salts, acids, alkalis, surfactants, and heavy metals including chromium, cadmium, copper, zinc, lead, and nickel.[195] [196] These pollutants contribute to approximately 20% of global industrial wastewater pollution, deoxygenating receiving waters, inhibiting photosynthesis through light blockage, and bioaccumulating toxins in aquatic ecosystems.[197] [198] Air emissions from textile processes include volatile organic compounds (VOCs) released during solvent-based printing, coating, and drying operations, as well as particulate matter, sulfur oxides, and nitrogen oxides from fossil fuel combustion in boilers and drying units.[199] [200] Hazardous air pollutants such as formaldehyde and benzene are regulated under frameworks like the U.S. Clean Air Act, with major sources required to meet emission standards to mitigate contributions to smog formation and respiratory health risks.[200] Solid waste outputs encompass non-hazardous fiber scraps and yarn residues from cutting and weaving, alongside hazardous sludges from wastewater treatment containing concentrated dyes and metals, with up to 80% of wet processing solid waste potentially recyclable but often landfilled or incinerated.[201] Synthetic fiber production adds pre-consumer microplastic emissions estimated at 0.12 million metric tons annually, while broader apparel manufacturing contributes around 8.3 million tons of plastic pollution yearly, including packaging and process losses that enter soils and waterways.[202] [203] These outputs exacerbate landfill burdens and long-term environmental persistence, though recycling rates remain low at about 15% globally for textiles.[204]Actual Mitigation Outcomes
In facilities adopting advanced wastewater treatment, such as combined ozonation and reverse osmosis, color removal rates have exceeded 90%, with primary ozonation achieving a 92.59-fold reduction and secondary ozonation a 97.27-fold reduction, alongside significant total organic carbon (TOC) decreases enabling 70-80% water reuse rates.[205] Coagulation using poly aluminum chloride (PAC) on effluents from Bangladesh districts reduced total dissolved solids (TDS) by 75.9% to 84%, depending on site-specific pollutant loads.[206] Enzymatic biodegradation methods have demonstrated up to 90% removal of dye coloration in lab and pilot-scale applications, though scalability remains constrained by enzyme stability and cost.[207] Best available techniques (BAT) for dyeing and finishing, including low-liquor-ratio machines and closed-loop rinsing, have yielded water savings of 30-50% per process cycle in European and Indian case studies, with associated reductions in chemical effluents by 20-40%.[208] Energy efficiency upgrades, such as heat recovery from exhaust gases, have cut consumption by 15-25% in wet processing, contributing to greenhouse gas emission drops of 10-20% in audited Turkish facilities implementing BAT.[210] However, these outcomes are site-specific and often limited to high-compliance regions; in major producers like Pakistan and Bangladesh, empirical surveys indicate only gradual adoption, with average wastewater COD reductions of 40-60% post-treatment but persistent non-compliance leading to net pollution discharges.| Mitigation Technique | Key Outcome Metric | Reduction Achieved | Source Region/Context |
|---|---|---|---|
| Ozonation + RO | Color removal | >90% | Pilot plant, general [205] |
| PAC coagulation | TDS reduction | 76-84% | Bangladesh districts [206] |
| BAT low-liquor dyeing | Water use | 30-50% | EU/India facilities [208] |
| Enzymatic treatment | Dye coloration | Up to 90% | Lab/pilot scales [207] |
| Heat recovery systems | Energy use | 15-25% | Turkish BAT audits [210] |
Social Dynamics
Labor Evolution
Textile labor transitioned from artisanal, household-based production to centralized factory systems during the Industrial Revolution, beginning in Britain around the 1760s with mechanized spinning and weaving.[214] This shift organized workers into disciplined factory routines, replacing craft-based autonomy with wage labor under managerial oversight, initially relying heavily on low-cost child and female workers who operated machinery for up to 14-16 hours daily.[214] In Britain, child labor was prevalent in textile mills, with children as young as four enduring hazardous conditions including machinery accidents and physical exhaustion; the Cotton Mills and Factories Act of 1819 prohibited employment of children under nine and limited hours for those under 16 to 12 per day, though enforcement was limited.[215] Subsequent reforms, such as the 1833 Factory Act, mandated education for child workers, reduced hours further, and introduced inspectors, gradually improving conditions amid advocacy from reformers and early unions, reducing child employment over time without immediately displacing it due to persistent demand for cheap labor.[216] By the late 19th and early 20th centuries in the United States and Europe, unionization efforts, such as those by garment workers' organizations formed in the 19th century, secured better wages, shorter hours, and safety standards, exemplified by strikes and the establishment of groups like the International Ladies' Garment Workers' Union in 1900, which addressed sweatshop abuses through collective bargaining.[217] These advancements coincided with technological refinements that increased productivity, allowing higher wages in developed economies, though labor-intensive segments persisted. Post-World War II globalization prompted offshoring from high-wage Western nations to developing countries, driven by rising labor costs and benefits; by 1996, over 60% of global clothing exports originated from developing economies, primarily Asia, providing employment to millions in labor-abundant regions despite initial poor conditions like low pay and long hours.[218] This migration raised average manufacturing wages in recipient countries over decades, as evidenced by Bangladesh's garment sector, where female employment surged from under 1 million in 1980 to over 4 million by 2010, contributing to poverty reduction and female empowerment through formal jobs, though vulnerabilities like the 2013 Rana Plaza collapse highlighted ongoing safety gaps.[219] As of 2024, the global textile and apparel workforce exceeds 430 million people, concentrated in Asia, with production shifts enabling access to affordable clothing worldwide while exposing workers to variable regulations; in low-income areas, wages range from $2-10 hourly, often below Western standards but above local alternatives, fostering economic mobility.[8] [220] Since 2000, automation technologies like robotic sewing and digital looms have accelerated, reducing labor intensity; the automation market in textiles grew toward USD 775 million by 2028, displacing routine jobs in cutting and assembly, particularly in apparel where manual dexterity limits full robot replacement, though overall employment impacts vary by region with negligible net losses in some cases like South Africa.[221] [222] In developed nations, U.S. textile employment fell to 270,700 by 2024 from peaks over 1 million mid-century, attributable to both offshoring and mechanization, while developing hubs face dual pressures of technology adoption and competition.[223] This evolution underscores labor's adaptation to efficiency gains, with automation complementing rather than eliminating human roles in complex tasks, sustaining industry viability amid rising costs.[224]Key Controversies
The textile manufacturing industry has faced persistent allegations of exploitative labor practices, particularly in developing economies where production is concentrated. Reports document widespread use of sweatshops characterized by wages below living standards, excessive overtime exceeding 60 hours per week, and inadequate safety measures, as seen in garment factories in Bangladesh and India where workers earn as little as $0.50 per hour despite producing for global brands.[225][226] These conditions have sparked debates, with critics arguing they perpetuate poverty cycles, while defenders, such as economists at the Cato Institute, contend that such factories offer employment superior to local alternatives like subsistence farming or unemployment in regions with few industrial options.[227] Child labor remains a documented issue in textile supply chains, especially cotton harvesting and garment assembly. The U.S. Department of Labor's 2023 list identifies textiles as a good produced with child labor in at least 18 countries, including significant prevalence in cotton-producing nations like Uzbekistan and Mali, where children as young as 5 are involved due to low-skill requirements and family economic pressures.[228] Estimates suggest 71% of child exploitation in agriculture ties to cotton, with forced child picking linked to crop damage minimization perceptions, though international pressure has reduced state-mandated quotas in some areas like Uzbekistan by 2021.[229][230] Forced labor controversies center on China's Xinjiang region, which supplies about 20% of global cotton. Multiple investigations, including satellite imagery, government documents, and survivor testimonies analyzed by the U.S. Department of Labor and State Department, indicate over 500,000 Uyghurs and other minorities coerced into cotton picking via state labor transfer programs since 2016, often under surveillance and paired with internment camps aimed at cultural assimilation.[231][232][233] Chinese authorities deny coercion, attributing participation to voluntary poverty alleviation and seasonal migration from other provinces, though independent verification is restricted.[234] This has prompted bans on Xinjiang cotton by Western governments and brands, highlighting tensions between supply chain traceability demands and global trade dependencies.[235] Fast fashion amplifies these issues through accelerated production cycles, leading to intensified worker exploitation. Brands like Shein and H&M have been accused of enabling factories with recruitment fees trapping migrant workers in debt bondage, verbal abuse, and unpaid overtime, with women comprising 60-70% of the 60 million global garment workforce often facing gender-based harassment.[236][237] Audits reveal less than 2% of workers earn living wages, fueling calls for transparency laws, though industry responses like voluntary codes have yielded mixed enforcement outcomes due to subcontracting opacity.[238][239]Economic Uplift Effects
Textile manufacturing has driven economic uplift in developing economies by serving as an accessible entry point into global value chains, generating mass employment opportunities that exceed those in traditional agriculture and informal sectors. The sector absorbs low-skilled labor, particularly from rural areas, providing stable wages that enable household investment in education, health, and entrepreneurship, thereby fostering intergenerational mobility. Globally, the apparel and textiles industry employs 60 to 70 million people, with a disproportionate share in low-income countries where it contributes more substantially to GDP—often 5-10% or higher—than the global average of around 2%.[183][240] This labor-intensive nature creates multiplier effects, spurring ancillary industries like logistics and packaging while building foundational skills for diversification into higher-value manufacturing.[186] In Bangladesh, the ready-made garments (RMG) subsector exemplifies these dynamics, employing over 4 million workers—primarily women migrating from agrarian poverty—and accounting for roughly 80% of total exports by value as of the mid-2010s, which propelled annual GDP growth to 6-7% and elevated the nation to lower-middle-income status in 2015. Poverty rates plummeted from 56.7% in 1991 to about 24% by 2016, directly attributable in part to RMG wages averaging 2-3 times rural agricultural incomes, enabling remittances that boosted rural consumption and reduced vulnerability to seasonal shocks.[241][242] Similar patterns emerged in Vietnam, where textile and apparel expansion since the 1990s supported export-led growth, with firm-level surveys indicating sustained job creation and wage premiums over non-factory alternatives, contributing to poverty reduction from 58% in 1993 to under 5% by 2016.[243] Ethiopia's nascent textile parks, established post-2010, have created over 100,000 jobs by 2023, targeting female empowerment and export revenues amid a push for industrialization; the sector's growth correlates with modest poverty declines and foreign direct investment inflows exceeding $1 billion annually in related manufacturing. These cases underscore causal mechanisms: export quotas and trade liberalization post-2005 Multi-Fibre Arrangement phaseout redirected production to labor-abundant locales, yielding real income gains despite initial low wages, as evidenced by econometric analyses linking apparel employment to household consumption rises of 20-30%. World Bank assessments confirm the sector's role in early industrialization stages, where employment elasticities—jobs per unit GDP growth—are highest in textiles compared to capital-intensive industries.[244][245][186] Empirical data from these expansions refute narratives overemphasizing exploitation by demonstrating net positive welfare effects, with alternatives like subsistence farming yielding lower caloric intake and health outcomes; however, sustained uplift requires infrastructure investments to mitigate bottlenecks like power shortages observed in Ethiopia.[246][247]References
- https://www.[researchgate](/page/ResearchGate).net/publication/385299303_Case_Studies_on_Reducing_Water_and_Chemical_Consumption_in_Textile_Processing
- https://www.[researchgate](/page/ResearchGate).net/publication/363178169_An_empirical_study_regarding_the_environmental_sustainability_practices_in_the_textile_industry
